BFT Basics & Bruises - The First Impact
- Blunt Force Trauma (BFT): Injury by non-penetrating impact. Mechanisms: compression, traction, shearing.
- Abrasions (Grazes/Scratches):
- Superficial epidermal damage.
- Types: Scratch, Graze, Imprint/Patterned (e.g., ligature, tyre).
- MLI: Site of impact, direction (skin tags).
- Contusions (Bruises):
- Subcutaneous hemorrhage from ruptured vessels; skin intact.
- MLI: Site, weapon pattern, comprehensive assessment (color changes unreliable for precise dating), violence degree.
- ⚠️ Bruise Dating Limitations: Color changes offer only general estimation - highly variable due to individual healing rates, skin tone, depth, location.
- Modern forensic practice: Color-based dating unreliable for precise medico-legal conclusions
- Comprehensive assessment considering mechanism, clinical presentation crucial
- ⚠️ Delayed Appearance: Bruises may appear hours to days post-injury; can manifest distant from impact site due to blood tracking

⭐ Bruises over lax tissues (e.g., eyelids) are often larger than over bony prominences for the same force.
💡 Absence of visible bruise at initial examination does not rule out blunt force injury - re-examination after time often prudent.
Lacerations & Fractures - Tears, Snaps, & Cracks
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Lacerations: Skin/tissue tears from blunt force.
- Margins: Irregular, abraded, bruised.
- Tissue bridges: Pathognomonic. 📌 Differentiates from incised wounds.
- Undermining common. Foreign bodies often present.
-
Fractures: Bone discontinuity.
- Skull Fractures:
- Linear: Most common.
- Depressed: Bone pushed inwards.
- Comminuted: Multiple fragments.
- Diastatic: Sutural separation (children).
- Basal: Signs 📌 "BRC" - Battle's sign (mastoid), Raccoon eyes (periorbital), CSF leak.
- Ring fracture: At foramen magnum (e.g., fall from height).
- Skull Fractures:
⭐ Lacerations are caused by crushing or stretching forces leading to tearing of tissues, characteristically showing bridging strands of tissue across the wound gap.

Head Trauma - Cranial Catastrophes
- Scalp Injuries:
- Abrasion, Contusion (subgaleal haematoma 'Goose egg'), Laceration (commonest).
- Black Eye (Raccoon eyes/Panda eyes): Periorbital ecchymosis with tarsal plate sparing; Anterior cranial fossa fracture.
- Battle's Sign: Mastoid ecchymosis; Middle/Posterior cranial fossa fracture.
- Skull Fractures (#):
- Linear (most common), Depressed (Pond/Ping-pong in infants), Diastatic (suture separation), Basal (CSF leak: rhinorrhea, otorrhea).
- Ring #: Around foramen magnum (fall from height/blow to vertex).
- Intracranial Haemorrhages (ICH):
- Extradural (EDH):
- Source: Middle Meningeal Artery (pterion fracture).
- Lucid interval (classic).
- CT: Biconvex/Lenticular, hyperdense. Does not cross sutures.
- Subdural (SDH):
- Source: Bridging veins.
- Acute (trauma, shaken baby) vs. Chronic (elderly, alcoholics).
- CT: Crescent/Sickle-shaped, hyperdense (acute). Crosses sutures.
- Subarachnoid (SAH):
- Source: Trauma (most common overall); Ruptured Berry aneurysm (non-traumatic).
- "Worst headache of life". Nuchal rigidity.
- CT: Blood in sulci/cisterns. LP: Xanthochromia.
- Intracerebral/Contusions:
- Coup (at impact site) & Contrecoup (opposite impact).
- Commonly affects Frontal/Temporal lobes.
- Extradural (EDH):
⭐ Lucid Interval: A period of consciousness between initial unconsciousness (due to concussion) and subsequent deterioration (due to haematoma expansion) is a classic feature of Extradural Haemorrhage (EDH).
Torso Trauma & Telltales - Body Blows & Beyond
-
Thoracic Injuries:
- Rib # (Flail chest: ≥3 cons. ribs, ≥2 places each - focus on respiratory compromise)
- Lung: Contusion, Laceration
- Heart: Commotio cordis, Cardiac rupture. Aortic rupture (isthmus).
- Diaphragmatic rupture
- CT scan gold standard for thoracic trauma assessment
-
Abdominal Injuries:
- Solid organs: Spleen & Liver (most common), Kidneys, Pancreas.
- Hollow viscus: Intestines (Seatbelt sign → Chance #), Stomach.
- Retroperitoneal hemorrhage
-
Patterned Injuries: Imprint of weapon (e.g., tram-line bruise).
-
Bruise Differentiation (Ante-mortem vs. Post-mortem):
📌 BILiVeR: Blue/Black → Green → Yellow → Brown/Resolved (Variable timing - requires histology + clinical correlation)
-
Complications: Hemorrhage, Infection, Fat embolism, ARDS.
⭐ Rupture of the aorta in blunt thoracic trauma most commonly occurs at the aortic isthmus.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Blunt force trauma manifests as abrasions, contusions, lacerations, and fractures.
- Abrasions: Superficial; patterned abrasions can identify the impacting object.
- Contusions: Age estimated by color changes; ectopic bruises (e.g., Battle's sign) indicate underlying fractures.
- Lacerations: Characterized by irregular margins, tissue bridges, and surrounding bruising.
- Patterned injuries, like tram-track bruises, are vital for weapon identification.
- Key head injuries: Coup-contrecoup mechanism; ring fractures at skull base from falls.
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